Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for the Acute Treatment of Migraine in Patients with Chronic Migraine: An Open-Label Pilot Study

Abstract Introduction Remote electrical neuromodulation (REN) is a novel acute treatment of migraine. Upper arm peripheral nerves are stimulated to induce conditioned pain modulation (CPM)—an endogenous analgesic mechanism in which conditioning stimulation inhibits pain in remote body regions. The R...

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Main Authors: Hida Nierenburg, Julio R. Vieira, Nirit Lev, Tamar Lin, Dagan Harris, Maya Vizel, Alon Ironi, Bryan Lewis, Paul Wright
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Adis, Springer Healthcare 2020-07-01
Series:Pain and Therapy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s40122-020-00185-1
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spelling doaj-1dfab88be0bd4c6c872d06cd1ce6fe352021-07-11T11:03:50ZengAdis, Springer HealthcarePain and Therapy2193-82372193-651X2020-07-019253154310.1007/s40122-020-00185-1Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for the Acute Treatment of Migraine in Patients with Chronic Migraine: An Open-Label Pilot StudyHida Nierenburg0Julio R. Vieira1Nirit Lev2Tamar Lin3Dagan Harris4Maya Vizel5Alon Ironi6Bryan Lewis7Paul Wright8Division of Neurology, Nuvance HealthDivision of Neurology, Nuvance HealthDepartment of Neurology, Meir Medical CenterTheranica Bio-ElectronicsTheranica Bio-ElectronicsTheranica Bio-ElectronicsTheranica Bio-ElectronicsDivision of Neurology, Nuvance HealthDivision of Neurology, Nuvance HealthAbstract Introduction Remote electrical neuromodulation (REN) is a novel acute treatment of migraine. Upper arm peripheral nerves are stimulated to induce conditioned pain modulation (CPM)—an endogenous analgesic mechanism in which conditioning stimulation inhibits pain in remote body regions. The REN device (Nerivio®, Theranica Bio-Electronics LTD., Israel) is FDA-authorized for acute treatment of migraine in adults who do not have chronic migraine. The current study assessed the consistency of response over multiple migraine attacks in people with chronic migraine who are typically characterized with severe pain intensity, high disability, and less robust response to triptans. Methods This was an open-label, single-arm, dual-center study conducted on adults with chronic migraine. Participants underwent a 4-week treatment phase in which they treated their migraine headaches with the device for 45 min within 1 h of attack onset. Pain levels were recorded at baseline, 2 h, and 24 h post-treatment. Efficacy outcomes (pain relief and pain-free responses at 2 h, sustained pain relief and sustained pain-free responses at 24 h) focused on intra-individual consistency of response across multiple attacks, which was defined as response in at least 50% of the treatments. Results Forty-two participants were enrolled, and 38 participants were evaluable for analyses; 73.7% (28/38) achieved pain relief at 2 h, 26.3% (10/38) were pain-free at 2 h, 84.4% (27/32) had sustained pain relief response at 24 h and 45.0% (9/20) had sustained pain relief response at 24 h in at least 50% of their treated attacks. The effects of REN on associated symptoms and improvement in function were also consistent. The incidence of device-related adverse events was low (1.8%). Conclusions REN used for a series of migraine attacks was effective and well tolerated across attacks. REN may offer a safe and effective non-pharmacological alternative for acute treatment in patients with chronic migraine. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov identifier, NCT04161807. Retrospectively registered on November 13, 2019.https://doi.org/10.1007/s40122-020-00185-1Acute migraine treatmentChronic migraineConsistencyHeadacheRemote electrical neuromodulationMedication overuse headache
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hida Nierenburg
Julio R. Vieira
Nirit Lev
Tamar Lin
Dagan Harris
Maya Vizel
Alon Ironi
Bryan Lewis
Paul Wright
spellingShingle Hida Nierenburg
Julio R. Vieira
Nirit Lev
Tamar Lin
Dagan Harris
Maya Vizel
Alon Ironi
Bryan Lewis
Paul Wright
Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for the Acute Treatment of Migraine in Patients with Chronic Migraine: An Open-Label Pilot Study
Pain and Therapy
Acute migraine treatment
Chronic migraine
Consistency
Headache
Remote electrical neuromodulation
Medication overuse headache
author_facet Hida Nierenburg
Julio R. Vieira
Nirit Lev
Tamar Lin
Dagan Harris
Maya Vizel
Alon Ironi
Bryan Lewis
Paul Wright
author_sort Hida Nierenburg
title Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for the Acute Treatment of Migraine in Patients with Chronic Migraine: An Open-Label Pilot Study
title_short Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for the Acute Treatment of Migraine in Patients with Chronic Migraine: An Open-Label Pilot Study
title_full Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for the Acute Treatment of Migraine in Patients with Chronic Migraine: An Open-Label Pilot Study
title_fullStr Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for the Acute Treatment of Migraine in Patients with Chronic Migraine: An Open-Label Pilot Study
title_full_unstemmed Remote Electrical Neuromodulation for the Acute Treatment of Migraine in Patients with Chronic Migraine: An Open-Label Pilot Study
title_sort remote electrical neuromodulation for the acute treatment of migraine in patients with chronic migraine: an open-label pilot study
publisher Adis, Springer Healthcare
series Pain and Therapy
issn 2193-8237
2193-651X
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Introduction Remote electrical neuromodulation (REN) is a novel acute treatment of migraine. Upper arm peripheral nerves are stimulated to induce conditioned pain modulation (CPM)—an endogenous analgesic mechanism in which conditioning stimulation inhibits pain in remote body regions. The REN device (Nerivio®, Theranica Bio-Electronics LTD., Israel) is FDA-authorized for acute treatment of migraine in adults who do not have chronic migraine. The current study assessed the consistency of response over multiple migraine attacks in people with chronic migraine who are typically characterized with severe pain intensity, high disability, and less robust response to triptans. Methods This was an open-label, single-arm, dual-center study conducted on adults with chronic migraine. Participants underwent a 4-week treatment phase in which they treated their migraine headaches with the device for 45 min within 1 h of attack onset. Pain levels were recorded at baseline, 2 h, and 24 h post-treatment. Efficacy outcomes (pain relief and pain-free responses at 2 h, sustained pain relief and sustained pain-free responses at 24 h) focused on intra-individual consistency of response across multiple attacks, which was defined as response in at least 50% of the treatments. Results Forty-two participants were enrolled, and 38 participants were evaluable for analyses; 73.7% (28/38) achieved pain relief at 2 h, 26.3% (10/38) were pain-free at 2 h, 84.4% (27/32) had sustained pain relief response at 24 h and 45.0% (9/20) had sustained pain relief response at 24 h in at least 50% of their treated attacks. The effects of REN on associated symptoms and improvement in function were also consistent. The incidence of device-related adverse events was low (1.8%). Conclusions REN used for a series of migraine attacks was effective and well tolerated across attacks. REN may offer a safe and effective non-pharmacological alternative for acute treatment in patients with chronic migraine. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov identifier, NCT04161807. Retrospectively registered on November 13, 2019.
topic Acute migraine treatment
Chronic migraine
Consistency
Headache
Remote electrical neuromodulation
Medication overuse headache
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s40122-020-00185-1
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